User:BeatrixBelibaste/sandbox
Others
[edit]/1 (Jeanne d'Arc (given name))
/2 (List of paintings by Marie-Guillemine Benoist)
Gibbet
[edit]- Catherine Mandeville Snow / Tobias Mandeville (or Manderville) / Arthur Spring
- FitzGerald, John Edward., Conflict and culture in Irish-Newfoundland Roman Catholicism, 1829-1850, 1997, p. 154-155 (Peter Downing, Mandeville and Spring)
- en ligne
- Boulton tried the case, and afterwards reported to Cochrane his sentence that the men were to be executed and their corpses brought to the site of the crime and hanged in chains as an example to the community, and that Catherine Snow was to be respited from execution only until she could deliver her baby." In March, the funeral of Mandeville and Spring in Harbour Grace was preceded by a mock execution held over the corpses in lieu of hanging in chains. This caused Cocheran report with some distress to Stanley that ... on the interference of the Roman Catholic Priests (the parties being of that persuasion) the hanging in chains was remitted; that an anatomical form was gone through of making a scratch with a penknife on their necks and that the parties had a public and rather imposing funeral and that the reason assigned for this relaxation of the sentence was the respectabitity of Mandeville.' Snow was dowed to deliver her child before being executed on 2 1 July 1 834.14 The most striking attribute of the mock execution and the funeral in Harbour Grace was its Irishness....
- Trainor, Mark William Thomas (2018) "Mercy we will take, and mercy we will give:" protests and justice in early nineteenth century Newfoundland. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. (Downey, Snow)
- Paul O'Neill, Upon this rock : the story of the Roman Catholic Church in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1988 (Snow, Mandeville, Spring) (to borrwo from IA - see FitzGerald)
- http://ngb.chebucto.org/Newspaper-Obits/hynes-news-1831-1840.shtml
- Royal Gazette and Newfoundland Advertiser, January 14, 1834 (Tuesday) : "The bodies of the malefactors Mandeville and Spring, in place of being dissected, are, we understand, to be taken to Port-de-Grave - there to be hung in chains, as a warning to others of the fatal effects of crime"
- http://ngb.chebucto.org/Newspaper-Obits/nflder-1831-34.shtml
- see Royal Gazette and Newfoundland Advertiser and The Newfoundlander
- Edward Jordan (pirate) and Margaret Jordan
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/22711505@N05/36630004634/
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/22711505@N05/37309549572/
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/archer10/35103954883/
- https://www.flickr.com/photos/kellymercer/39040354190/
- The Criminal Recorder
- A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie, 1867
- subscription to send Margaret to Ireland
- Attempt to Revive in Ireland the Law for Hanging in Chains (1837)
- Society for the Diffusion of Information on the Subject of Capital Punishments, The Punishment of Death: A Selection of Articles from the Morning Herald with Notes (Elder Hatchard-Smith, 1837) 143-146 here
- "The Great Leap Backward: Criminal Law Reform with the Hon Jarrod Bleijie, p. 26-27
- "Post-punishment practices were out of / fashion by the time the House of Lords sought to revive them for Ireland in 1837.266 Although the Bill passed the House, the law never came into force — one contemporaneous author suggesting that ‘its authors had not the courage, after the exposure of its merits, to submit it to the King’.267"
- (266) See ‘Attempt to Revive in Ireland the Law for Hanging in Chains’, English Chronicle, 27 August 1833, reproduced in Society for the Diffusion of Information on the Subject of Capital Punishments, The Punishment of Death: A Selection of Articles from the Morning Herald with Notes (Elder Hatchard-Smith, 1837) 143.
- 267 See ‘Attempt to revive in Ireland the Law for Hanging in Chains Continued — This Barbarous Attempt Defeated’, English Chronicle, 27 August 1833, reproduced in Society for the Diffusion of Information on the Subject of Capital Punishments, The Punishment of Death: A Selection of Articles from the Morning Herald with notes (Elder Hatchard-Smith, 1837) 146.
- "Post-punishment practices were out of / fashion by the time the House of Lords sought to revive them for Ireland in 1837.266 Although the Bill passed the House, the law never came into force — one contemporaneous author suggesting that ‘its authors had not the courage, after the exposure of its merits, to submit it to the King’.267"
Jane Dalton
[edit]- Sims, 'Remarks on books profound': the library of Jane Dalton jstor - researchgate
- Malcom Cook, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s English Correspondents During the French Revolution, in British-French Exchanges in the Eighteenth Century
- download pdf (on GD)
- Paul and Mary, an Indian Story. 2 vols. Translated by Jane Dalton. London: J. Dodsley.
- https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k11861t/ text
- Rousseau's book of botany from Jane Dalton's Library (Harvard)
- p. 215- 216
- 1743 edition of Sébastien Vaillant's Botanicon Parisiense
- "This Book belonged to J. J. Rousseau, & the hand-writing is his. It was given to me by Mrs. Dalton, who knew him well."
- same book note from poet Samuel Rogers
- Botanical Text Owned by Jean-Jacques Rousseau Found and Exhibited at Lloyd Library, owned by Rousseau at the time of his death (not from Dalton's library)
- "now 8 botanical books worldwide verified as having been Rousseau’s ... In addition to the two books at Harvard University and the Lloyd Library, three botanical texts recognized as having belonged to Rousseau are located in the United Kingdom, one is in France, and two are found in private collections." (2007)
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau's copy of Albrecht von Haller's Historia stirpium indigenarum Helvetiae inchoata (1768) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12817597
- "La petite cousine qui est botaniste à toute outrance, m'a aidé dans mes recherches"
- "Je n’ai pas pu la trouver, mais Mlle Dalton qui l’a, (sans aucun ménagement pour votre fierté) veut positivement que vous l’acceptiez.
- Bookplates / ex-libris
- here, p. 102
- Maria Gerard Messenger Collection of Women's Bookplates (images)***
- Ladies' Book-plates: An Illustrated Handbook for Collectors and Book-lovers
- p. 106 (no image ?)
- Keynes, Biography of Malthus
- Albury Cottage, Guildford
- Old Cottage and Domestic Architecture in South-West Surrey, image, p. 89.
- family
- Notes and Queries, 144-145, 1923, p. 48 ext
"She appointed as her sole heir her daughter Jane Dalton with remainder to her daughter Mary Powlett-Powlett. Proved at London, July 12, 1798, by Jane Dalton, Somerset, the sole Executrix... Henry Dalton was baptized at Leatherhead Aug. 14, 1746...
ters Jane, Mary and Martha to £4000 each.
Proved at London July 16, 1772, by Daniel Malthus (P.C.C. Taverner, 253), on Sept. 12, 1825, Administration of the chattels and credits left unadministered by Daniel Malthus, was granted to the Rev. Thomas Robert Malthis, Clerk. ... Henry Dalton's will is in two portions, (a) dated May 6, 1918 [sic for 1818], and (b) dated Nov. 21, 1820. He devised his lands at Walesby and Ottby, Co. Lincoln, to John Eckersall, Esq, of Bath and late of Claverton, Co. Somerset, and his lands at Albury, Co. Surrey, to Sydenham Malthus, Esq. § He...."
Childcare
[edit]- Learning patterns/Organize childcare during a Wikimedia event
- Learning patterns/Child room
- [artjournal.collegeart.org/?p=7088 Wikipedia Needs You, But Do You Need Wikipedia?]
- Art+Feminism
- Amber Berson
Anthropodermic
[edit]- Redskin, Tanned Hide Conference, 29 March 2019
- Tink Tinker, [http://raceandreligion.com/JRER/Volume_5_%282014%29.html Red Skin, Tanned Hide: A Book of Christian History Bound in the Flayed Skin of a Native American", Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion, 2014
- Tink Tinker, “Damn It, He’s An Injun!” Christian Murder, Colonial Wealth, And Tanned Human Skin
- Tink Tinker,
- Mahan, Jeffrey H. "The Skin of an Indian: Texts, Bodies, Material Religion" Material Religion (2019): 1-4.
Sybil Ludington
[edit]- Sybil Ludington
- Paula D. Hunt, "Sybil Ludington, the Female Paul Revere: The Making of a Revolutionary War Heroine", The New England Quarterly, Volume 88, Issue 2, June 2015, p.187-222
- Was There Really a Teenage, Female Paul Revere?, Smithsonian Mag, April 26, 2017
Erastus Elmer Barclay, publisher of lurid sensational narratives
[edit]- "Erastus Elmer Barclay (EE Barclay), Philadelphia publisher and author of lurid pamphlets and pseudo-memoirs; occasional collaborator with A. R. Orton (Arthur R. Orton) (also O. R. Arthur) ..."
- MCDADE, Thomas M. "Lurid Literature of the Last Century: The Publications of EE Barclay". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1956, vol. 80, no 4, p. 452-464.
- Publications of Erastus Elmer Barclay (blog, ico)
- worldcat - viaf - LoC
- [KEETLEY, Dawn. http://www.academia.edu/download/34233395/Keetley__Victim_and_Victimizer.pdf Victim and Victimizer: Female Fiends and Unease over Marriage in Antebellum Sensational Fiction]. American Quarterly, 1999, vol. 51, no 2, p. 344-384. (Barclay + Orton)
- ex
- Narrative and confessions of Lucretia P. Cannon : who was tried, convicted, and sentenced to be hung at Georgetown, Delaware with two of her accomplices : Containing an account of some of the most horrible and shocking murders and daring robberies ever committed by one of the female sex.
- Patty Cannon***
- The Great Conspiracy (Lincoln)
- cover - [
- Life, trial and conviction of William H. Westervelt, for the abduction of little Charley Ross : the tragic death of the burglars Mosher and Douglass (on Long Island, N.Y.), who were implicated in abducting the poor little fellow : the confession, the whole case, the trial in full. Philadelphia : Published by Barclay & Co., c1877.
- Elligen, J., The terrible deeds of George L. Shaftesbury : who killed his own mother and sister, fled from justice by leaping from the palisades, swimming the Hudson River, and taking refuge in New York city, where he was joined by the female murderer, Marie Lavine, whom he detected in the act of dragging to the river the body of a man whom she had murdered in one of the dens of Walnut Street, in that city ; and they, after passing through the most dark and unparalleled career of crime, were finally both executed in Quebec, June 7, 1850, for the murder of Lord Amel and family. St. Louis, Mo. : E. Barclay & H.M. Rulison, 1851.
- A thrilling and exciting account of the sufferings and horrible tortures inflicted on Mortimer Bowers and Miss Sophia Delaplain, by the Spanish authorities, for the supposed participation with Gen. Lopez in the invasion of Cuba. Charleston, S.C ., E. E. Barclay, M. B. Crosson & Co., 1851
- E. E. Barclay sur Open Library
- Wright American Fiction 1851-1875
- sur Internet Archive
- Crimes, confessions, culprits, and convicts – 19th century tales of murder
- Pulp Fiction Pamphlets: Judaism, Macbeth, and Murder?
- Killers (The): A Narrative of Real Life in Philadelphia
Arthur R. Orton
[edit]- A. R. Orton, (also O. R. Arthur)
- Online edition of The Three Sisters + list of publications by Orton***
- KEETLEY, Dawn, Victim and Victimizer: Female Fiends and Unease over Marriage in Antebellum Sensational Fiction. American Quarterly, 1999, vol. 51, no 2, p. 344-384. (Barclay + Orton)
- Worldcat
- Alfreda Eva Bell [Arthur R. Orton], Boadicea; the Mormon wife. Life scenes in Utah, Baltimore, Arthur R. Orton, 1855 also here (see as a "Anti-Mormon tract"]
Sophia Hamilton/ Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton
[edit]- See also section Barclayand Orton about fictive biography, women, crime and fiction, etc.
- Bibliography
- Sophia Hamilton - "True" crime?, Crime and Punishment, University of New Brunswick,
- Louis Mirando, When True Crime Meets Crime Fiction: A Bibliographical Mystery, Off the Shelf : the Osgoode Hall Law Library Blog, 3 August 2017
- Sara Lynn Crosby, "Poisonous Mixtures: Gender, Race, Empire and Cultural Authority in Antebellum Poisoner Literature," (PhD dissertation, English, University of Notre Dame, 2006).
- Sara L. Crosby, Poisonous Muse: The Female Poisoner and the Framing of Popular Authorship in Jacksonian America, University of Iowa Press, 2016, p. 122, 123, 125; notes 181-182
- CHEN, Ashley et FIANDER, Sarah. "Commemorating captive women: Representations of criminalized and incarcerated women in Canadian penal history museums". In : The Palgrave handbook of prison tourism. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2017. p. 387-413. (p. 399) (available UL, Google Books)
- citing : Frigon, Sylvie. 2006. "Mapping Scripts and Narratives of Women Who Kill in Fiction (Cinema) And In Fact (Trials): Inscribing the Everyday". In Killing Women: The Visual Culture of Gender and Violence, eds. Anette Burfoot & Susan Lord. Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. (available UL, BAnQ, Google Books)
- Alex Gagnon, La communauté du dehors: Imaginaire social et crimes célèbres au Québec (XIXe-XXe siècle)
- "Après avoir fait mourir son mari et son enfant, Sophie Hamilton ouvrit une hôtellerie où elle assassinait les voyageurs ... Ce récit de La Patrie est d'autant plus invraisemblable que les journaux de l'époque, curieusement muets au sujet d'un... "
- "Une femme de proie", La Patrie, 2 December 1922, p. 17***
- source : this edition (Montreal, L.C., on the 22d of January, 1845) - died 2 Feb 845
- "Une femme de proie", La Patrie, 2 December 1922, p. 17***
- "Après avoir fait mourir son mari et son enfant, Sophie Hamilton ouvrit une hôtellerie où elle assassinait les voyageurs ... Ce récit de La Patrie est d'autant plus invraisemblable que les journaux de l'époque, curieusement muets au sujet d'un... "
- [KEETLEY, Dawn. http://www.academia.edu/download/34233395/Keetley__Victim_and_Victimizer.pdf Victim and Victimizer: Female Fiends and Unease over Marriage in Antebellum Sensational Fiction]. American Quarterly, 1999, vol. 51, no 2, p. 344-384. (Barclay + Orton) (not on Sophia Hamilton, but lurid literature and "female fiends")
- Impressions (online exhibition, National Library of Canada)
- Loisirs et littérature / Leisure and Literature (image cover Montreal, L.C., on the 4th of August, 1845)
- 250 Years of Printing in the Lives of Canadians, also available in French
- note, York University Library Catalogue :
- "First printed in New York in 1844, an edition was published in Frederickton, New Brunswick the same year as the Montreal edition. Most likely fictitious [the Frederickton edition claims she was executed in Frederickton in April, 1845, while the Montreal edition puts her untimely demise in that city in January], but a particularly gruesome entry in the "true crime" genre. In his preface Jackson implies that Ms. Hamilton was the product of the depravities of an urban upbringing and pitches his tale as a cautionary example to parents. Her many crimes are recounted in detail. Hamilton supposedly was widowed at nineteen by poisoning her elderly husband. She then set herself up as a tavern-keeper and went on to rob and murder several of her guests. Her house was also used as a way-station for smugglers operating between Frederickton and Calais, Maine. The final few pages print her confession, graced by an illustration of her in prison. The title-page vignette shows Hamilton standing over one of her victims, and the frontispiece shows a highway robbery."--Lawbook Exchange catalogue listing.
- Item Description: Apparently fictitious. A reproduction of the text, published in Montreal, gives Montreal as the place of execution and the 22nd of January as the date.
- editions
- on Internet Archive
- manu versions - Cornell
- Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton (Cornell), who was tried, condemned and sentenced to be hung, at Montreal, L.C., on the 25th of November, 1844, for the perpetration of the most shocking murders and daring robberies perhaps recorded in the annals of crime / carefully selected by the author, William H. Jackson. New York: Printed for the publisher, 1844.
- scan (color) - original from Cornell University Library
- image is edition 4th of August, 1845 in Montreal, not New York...
- Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton (IA), who was tried, condemned and sentenced to be hung : at Montreal, L.C., on the 22d of January, 1845, for the perpetration of the most shocking murders and daring robberies perhaps recorded in the annals of crime : carefully selected by the author, William H. Jackson. Montreal, L. C., Printed for the publisher, 1845
- scan (color) - original from Boston Public Library on IA
- other original : BAnQ
- Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton (Hathi) : who was tried, convicted, and sentenced to be hung, at Frederickton [sic], on the 8th day of April, 1845, for the perpetration of the most shocking murders and daring robberies perhaps recorded in the annals of crime / carefully selected by the author, William H. Jackson. Frederickton , N.B. : Printed for the publisher, 1845.
- CIHM/ICMH collection de microfiches ; no. 89205 / also IA
- better image of the cover (HeinOnline) or here
- original : Brock University, James A. Gibson Library
- Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton (Cornell), who was tried, condemned, and sentenced to be hung, at Montreal, L.C., on the 4th of August, 1845, for the perpetration of the most shocking murders and daring robberies perhaps recorded in the annals of crime / carefully selected by the author, William H. Jackson. Montreal, L. C. : Printed for the publisher, 1845.
- According to Cornell's Notice, v Montreal 22d of January, 1845, but according to the front cover : Montreal, L.C., on the 4th of August, 1845***
- original : Library and Archives Canada, Reserve - HV6248 H16 J2 see Amicus Record
- also Acadia University, Vaughan Memorial Library;
- ed Gutenberg, with ill.
- better cover
- Life and confession of Sophia Hamilton] : who was tried, condemned and sentenced to be hung : at Montréal, L.C., April 5th, 1847 : for the perpetration of the most shocking murders and daring robberies perhaps recorded in the annals of crime. Montréal, L.C. : Printed for the Publisher, 1847.
- Worldcat
- (catalogue error ? to investigate)
- edition, OCLC
- original from Brown
- theater
- Cold Woman: New Brunswick’s Murderess, Fredericton, 2012
- The Next Folding Theatre Company’s premiere of Cold Woman: New Brunswick’s Murderess ran at St. Thomas University’s Ted Daigle Auditorium November 15-17, 2012 under the artistic direction of Ryan Griffith. The play is collectively written by Emily Bossé, Alex Donovan, Jeremy Fowler, Matt Goodwin, Brett Loughery, and Julia Whelen.
- A collaborative play tells tale of NB killer
- Dark and twisted tale leaves audience haunted
- Cold Woman leaves audience feeling warm and satisfied
- context
- Murder and Women in 19th-Century America, exhibit (images available on flickr
- "Ann Walters is accused of more than a dozen gruesome stabbings, and while the accounts of her crimes are, according to Cohen’s Bibliography of Early American Law, “generally considered to be fictitious” (the same crimes, detail for detail, often word for word, are attributed to Walters, to a woman named Sophia Hamilton, and to yet another woman, Mary Jane Gordon; the crimes are reported to have taken place in England, in Maine, and in Maryland, during the 1810s, the 1820s, and the 1840s… though court records are always mysteriously lacking) they provide insight into the 19th-century zeitgeist: “Readers may easily perceive that [Walters] location was in a slave state [Maryland] where morality is not very exalted, as such a course could not have been carried on in a free state so long, without meeting the eye of detection.” source